Around 40 per cent of teenage girls still defecate in open

Update: 2018-10-26 05:30 IST

At a time when the government is claiming success for its flagship Swachh Bharat Mission, a survey has revealed that around 40 per cent of the teenage girls in the country still have to defecate in the open. The survey also found that 46 per cent of teenage girls use unhygienic materials during mensuration and that one out of every second girl was anaemic. 

The study, named TAG (Teen Age Girls) Report 2018, was carried out among 74,000 girls in the age group of 13-19 years, across 600 districts, by Project Nanhi Kali, and compiled by Naandi Foundation, with grant support from Mahindra group. "There was a pressing need to understand our teenage girls better. 

I am confident that the TAG Report will serve as an important reference document for those in both the public and private sectors that are working towards the upliftment of girls and women across the country," Anand Mahindra, chairman, Mahindra group, said at the launch. 

According to the report, there are 80 million teenage girls in the country at present. "40 per cent of teenage girls are still having to defecate in the open, while 46 per cent use unhygienic materials during menstruation. Also, only 46.3 per cent of the rural girls surveyed had access to hygienic methods of menstrual protection," according to the TAG report.

In terms of education, the survey found 81 per cent of teenage girls to be currently studying. Of the teenage girls who were still studying, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Telangana and West Bengal scored the highest, with 100 per cent of the respondents saying they hadn't given up their education. 

Besides, nearly 78 per cent of rural girls are currently studying, compared with 87 per cent of urban girls, highlighting how education is of importance across the country, the report said. It also revealed that 96 per cent of teenage girls are unmarried with barely any difference in the percentage of rural girls of whom 95.5 per cent were unmarried, compared with 96.6 per cent in urban areas. While 70 per cent of the girls surveyed said that they want to pursue higher studies, as much as 74 per cent wish to work after their studies and have a specific career in mind. 

Career aspiration is as strong in rural girls (71.8 per cent) as in urban girls (80.2 per cent), it said adding in rural as well as urban India, 73 per cent of girls aspire to marry only after they are 21 years old, by which time they would expect to be earning a living.  The survey findings have been used to prepare a TAG Index, which compares the performance of each state on status of their teenage girls. According to the Index, Kerala and Mizoram were the top two states, while the top three cities were Mumbai, Kolkata and Bengaluru.

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